Day at Office for Afghan Drug Prosecutor Paperwork and Death Threats
EVEN though he goes to his office in an armored vehicle escorted by several guards, Yar Mohammad Hussainkhel takes a different route every morning, hoping to confuse the many enemies who want to kill him.
America’s shameful neglect of its Afghan friends and allies
Since the Taliban returned to power there has been no shortage of crises facing Afghanistan.
With new newspaper and new businesses, Afghan refugees finding new community in Missouri
ST. LOUIS — Moji Sidiqi was nine years old when she first came to the United States with her family. As a toddler, she would leave her home country of Afghanistan and move to not one, but two new countries.
Pakistan abruptly turns against Afghan refugees, calls for deportation
After Pakistan's caretaker government last week abruptly agreed to deport the 1.7 million Afghans who are estimated to live in the country illegally, the Interior Ministry on Tuesday announced a 28-day deadline for them to leave voluntarily, promising a “reward” to anyone who shares information on their whereabouts ...
New data confirms that the U.S. rebuilt the refugee resettlement program
As fiscal year 2023 comes to a close at the end of September, the latest data from the State Department paints a clear picture: the U.S. refugee program is back.
They Gave All for America. Why Can’t They Get Green Cards?
The Afghan Adjustment Act offers a way out of immigration limbo, but it languishes in Congress.